Anna Suchecka mit Medaille und Urkunde der Ehre im Namen Vater Adolf Otto als Gerechte unter den Völkern im Beisein der Hedva Gil in Yad Vashem geehrt, dessen Leben war im zweiten Weltkrieg gerettet. Jerusalem, Israel. 28. November 2011.
2557 x 3850 px | 21,6 x 32,6 cm | 8,5 x 12,8 inches | 300dpi
Aufnahmedatum:
28. November 2011
Ort:
Yad Vashem Holocaust Museum, Jerusalem, Israel
Weitere Informationen:
Dieses Bild kann kleinere Mängel aufweisen, da es sich um ein historisches Bild oder ein Reportagebild handel
Anna Suchecka honored at Yad Vashem with medal and certificate of honor on behalf of father, Adolf Otto, as Righteous Among the Nations in the presence of the Hedva Gil, who’s life was saved in World War II. Jerusalem, Israel. 28th November 2011. A ceremony is held posthumously honoring Adolf Otto, as Righteous Among the Nations from Germany. His daughter, Anna Suchecka, has arrived from Poland to accept the medal and certificate of honor on his behalf. The event takes place in the presence of the survivor Hedva Gil, Polish Ambassador to Israel H.E. Agnieszka Magdziak Miszewska, Deputy Head of Mission at the the German Embassy in Israel Peter Prugel, family and friends. A memorial ceremony is held in the Hall of Remembrance followed by the awarding of the medal and certificate in the Synagogue at Yad Vashem. Press release by Yad Vashem PR, 24/11/2011: Adolf Otto was born in 1904 in Walbrzych (Waldenburg), in Lower Silesia. Lower Silesia was part of Germany during World War II, and after the war became part of Poland. During WWII, Adolf served in the German Air Force, in a factory that produced uniforms. The factory was located in Zawiercie, where some 7, 000 Jews lived until the outbreak of the war. A ghetto was established in 1941, and the majority of the Jews who lived in the ghetto worked in the local German Air Force factory. Hedva Gil, born Alfreda Leizerowicz in 1929, was among the factory workers. In the summer of 1943, Adolf told Hedva that he was going on sick leave, but before he left, he gave her his home address and told her that in the event of danger, he would shelter her in his home. In August 1943, the final destruction of the Zawiercie ghetto began. Hedva escaped from the ghetto and arrived at Adolf 's house without any identification. He accepted her immediately. Adolf and his wife had a young son, who, like other young people at the time, was a member of the Hitler Youth. The couple told their son that Hedva was a young Jewish girl
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